Many of you may have already read ASCE Geotehnical Special Publication No. 41, "Predicted and Measured Behavior of Five Spread Footings on Sand", ASCE, 1994. I am just finishing it and find it very interesting. The Federal Highway Admin. and the University of Texas sponsored the study.
A series of soil tests, Borehole Shear Tests, Cross-Hole Wave Tests, PiezoCone Penetration Tests, Dilatometer Tests, Step Blade Tests, Standard Penetration Tests, and five others where performed on the same site. The test data was sent out to respondants who volunteered to predict load and settlements for Q25, Q150, s @ 30 min. and s @ 20 years.
Five footings were constructed and tested and then compared to the prior predictions of 31 engineers (some were teams of 2-3 engineers). The predictors could use whatever methods they wished, but all had to report based on the information provided and in a standard format.
I found the reading quite interesting and the results somewhat surprising. A prediction was considered successful if it was within +/-20% of the actual test values. No one had ALL their answers fall with the +/-20%. But, the description of the participants methods and their reasoning is pretty educational. If you haven't read it, I think it is well worth the effort and the $32 price (less if you are a member of ASCE).
A series of soil tests, Borehole Shear Tests, Cross-Hole Wave Tests, PiezoCone Penetration Tests, Dilatometer Tests, Step Blade Tests, Standard Penetration Tests, and five others where performed on the same site. The test data was sent out to respondants who volunteered to predict load and settlements for Q25, Q150, s @ 30 min. and s @ 20 years.
Five footings were constructed and tested and then compared to the prior predictions of 31 engineers (some were teams of 2-3 engineers). The predictors could use whatever methods they wished, but all had to report based on the information provided and in a standard format.
I found the reading quite interesting and the results somewhat surprising. A prediction was considered successful if it was within +/-20% of the actual test values. No one had ALL their answers fall with the +/-20%. But, the description of the participants methods and their reasoning is pretty educational. If you haven't read it, I think it is well worth the effort and the $32 price (less if you are a member of ASCE).